Nepal court jails 2 former ministers, 14 others over refugee scam


KATHMANDU, July 15 (Reuters) - A ⁠court in Nepal jailed two former government ministers after they were found guilty of ⁠forging documents to enable Nepali nationals to be resettled in the U.S. as ‌Bhutanese refugees, a court document and lawyers said on Wednesday.

The district court in Kathmandu jailed former Deputy Prime Minister and Energy Minister Top Bahadur Rayamajhi to four years for offences against the state, fraud and involvement in organised crime. ​It also sentenced former Home Minister Bal Krishna Khand to ⁠two years in jail as an ⁠accomplice, a court document showed. The rulings were handed down late on Tuesday.

Rayamajhi, who is in ⁠custody, ‌and Khand, who is out on bail, were not available for comment. In the past they have denied any involvement in the scam.

Dharma Raj Regmi, a lawyer for ⁠Rayamajhi, said his client was “never involved in policy making for the ​refugees” and that he would ‌appeal against the verdict.

Khand’s lawyer Pankaj Karna also said he would appeal.

Fourteen other people, ⁠including a former ​top bureaucrat in the home ministry and a former Bhutanese refugee leader, were sentenced to up to four years in jail, the document showed.

It was not immediately clear if any Nepali nationals were sent to ⁠the United States as fake Bhutanese refugees. The scam ​was uncovered in 2023 when both men had already left government.

About 120,000 Bhutanese nationals of Nepali origin have fled the neighbouring Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan to Nepal since the early 1990s, demanding more political ⁠freedom in the majority Buddhist country of less than 800,000 people.

Nearly 113,000 of them have been resettled in several Western countries, including the United States, Canada and Australia, under a third-country resettlement programme after the two South Asian neighbours failed to agree on repatriation.

Washington has taken about 100,000 ​refugees from Nepal.

Several thousand are still living in camps in ⁠eastern Nepal saying they want to return to Bhutan.

In September last year, 76 people died in youth-led ​anti-corruption protests that led to the collapse of Nepal's government.

A ‌new Gen Z-backed government headed by former rapper ​turned politician Balendra Shah, 36, was elected in March. Shah has pledged to crack down on alleged corruption under previous administrations.

(Reporting by Gopal Sharma; Editing by Kate Mayberry)

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